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How does access to social pensions and public health
care affect the well-being of elderly poor in India?
Sitakanta Panda and Sourabh B. Paul (IIT Delhi)
Katharina Michaelowa and Viola Werner (UZH)
Indo-Swiss Social Sciences Research Seminar: 8th-10th of September
Overview
� Motivation
� Research questions
� Background on social pensions and public health care
� Data
� Empirical approach
� Milestones
2
Motivation
• Poverty-mortality linkage: Elderly poor die earlier than elderly rich (Pal & Palacios, 2011)
3
Demographic change
Weakening family support
High rates of informal sector employment
Widespread poverty
Adverse impacts on well-being of
elderly poor
Motivation
To mitigate the adverse impacts on elderly poor, governments in developing countries are pursuing two important approaches: 1) Social pensions
2) Public health care
4
What do we do in this project?
We analyze the effectiveness of these two strategies in
improving the health status of the elderly poor in India.
Research questions
How has access to
improved the well-being of elderly poor in terms of health outcomes?
5
social pensions public health care
Image source: Creative commons
Background on social pensions
1995 Introduction of Indira Gandhi National Old Age Pension Scheme (IGNOAPS)
2006-07 Significant increase of social pension amounts, Below Poverty Line (BPL) card was recommended for targeting Eligibility: • State-specific retirement age • Living in a BPL household Social pension amount:
6
Central government contribution
State government contribution
Social pension amount
Background on public health care and RSBY
7
Access to health infrastructure - Network of public health care
- Availability of health care services for elderly
- Progress under NRHM for basic health care
National Health Insurance Scheme - RSBY - Introduced in 2008, 35 million households
- Free in-patient health care for BPL households in registered hospitals
- Protection against catastrophic health care expenditures
Image source: Creative commons
Data
Indian Human Development Survey 2005 and 2011
• Nationally representative survey of more than 41,000 households in
about 1500 villages and 970 urban neighborhoods across India
• Information on access to social pensions, village level health care
facilities, health insurance coverage
• Several individual and household characteristics
8
Why is the data unique?
• First all-India panel data set allowing evaluation of public policies
9
2005
IHDS I
2005
National Rural Health Mission
2006-07
Major social pension reforms
2008
RSBY
2011
IHDS II
Empirical approach: Social pensions
1. Analyze access to social pensions using binary dependent variable
model 2. Obtain propensity score for households/individuals to receive social
pensions 3. Conditional on the same propensity of receiving social pensions analyze
their impact on the health state of elderly
10
Characteristics of household and of
elderly individual
Access to social pensions
Health outcomes of elderly
individuals
Development of social pension amounts across India
11
2004 2006 2011
75
200 200
125
300 300 250
375
600
200
400
1000
Andhra Pradesh Uttar Pradesh Maharashtra Tamil Nadu
Source: Ministry of Rural Development.
Development of social pension coverage across India
12
6.7 6.62 8.08 8.00 8.71 11.51
15.02 16.36 17.06 19.7
0
5
10
15
20
25 Number of beneficiaries (in mio.)
Can we observe the increase in coverage also in relative terms? 2005: 10 % of all Indian elderly 60 plus received social pension 2010: 18% of Indian elderly 60 plus received social pension
Source: Indiastat, 2012.
Are BPL households benefiting from social pensions?
13
• Since 2005 the share of social pension beneficiaries holding a BPL card has increased.
• In 2011 still 26% of the beneficiaries do not fulfill the criteria.
BPL 53%
Non-BPL 47%
2005
BPL 74%
Non-BPL 26%
2011
Source: IHDS 2005 and 2011.
Are they really poor? – Household assets
14
Asset-wise distribution of beneficiaries
45.34%
26.75%
16.62%
11.30%
46.68%
27.09%
18.66%
7.56%
1st quartile
2nd quartile
3rd quartile
4th quartile
Share of beneficiaries - 2012 Share of beneficiaries - 2005
Source: IHDS 2005 and 2011.
Are they really poor? – Consumption expenditures
15
Per capita consumption expenditure distribution of beneficiaries
32.62%
27.27%
24.14%
15.96%
30.72%
31.06%
22.39%
15.84%
1st quartile
2nd quartile
3rd quartile
4th quartile
Share of beneficiaries - 2005 Share of beneficiaries - 2012
Source: IHDS 2005 and 2011.
Empirical approach: Public health care
1) Creating indicators for availability of health care facilities and coding
whether health care services for elderly are available
2) Panel data regression analysis
3) Potential identification approach: Quasi-experimental method such as difference-in-differences or instrumental variable estimation
16
Availability of public health care
Health state of elderly poor
Empirical approach: RSBY coverage
1. Analyze RSBY coverage using binary dependent variable model 2. Obtain propensity score for households/individuals to be covered by
RSBY 3. Conditional on the same propensity of being covered by RSBY, we
analyze their impact on the health state of elderly
17
Characteristics of household and of
elderly individual
Health insurance coverage
Health outcomes of elderly
individuals
Milestones
18
Autumn 2015 Data preparation, data analysis and literature review for first paper
Winter 2015 - 16 Draft writing for first paper
Spring 2016 Finalizing paper on social pensions
Summer 2016 Presenting the first paper on conferences, preparation of submission to a journal
Autumn 2016 Workshop in Zurich
Autumn 2016 Data preparation, data analysis and literature review for second paper
Winter 2016 - 17 Draft writing for second paper on access to public health care
Spring 2017 Presenting the second paper on conferences
Summer 2017 Preparing the second paper for journal submission Final workshop in Delhi
Thank you!
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